31 - City of Fiends (36 page)

Read 31 - City of Fiends Online

Authors: Michael Jecks

‘What is that, Sir Baldwin? Seeking assistance? There is no one near here. I conducted my spying with the greatest of care, I assure you,’ Sir Charles called.

Baldwin motioned now to Edgar, flattened his palm and lowered it in dumb sign. Edgar nodded, and was about to drop from his horse when Sir Charles laughed.

‘Do ask Edgar to stay there, Sir Baldwin. I can see you both, and I would so hate to have to fire this crossbow at him before he has had a chance to leap upon me.’

‘Greatly though I enjoy our conversation, I think I must leave you,’ Baldwin said, peering through the screen of leaves to see the man.

‘Please don’t do that. I would be very sorry to have to hurt this fellow any more,’ Sir Charles called back, and there was an edge to his voice as he spoke.

‘Who?’ Baldwin said.

‘It . . . It’s me, Sir Baldwin,’ Sir James de Cockington called.

‘Is that the Sheriff?’ Sir Richard bawled.

‘Yes, it is me.’

‘Aye, right. Then you’ll know that we don’t tend to suffer felons to barter with a man’s life, eh?’ he yelled.

‘That has been the rule, I know, but there are times—’

‘I am a King’s Officer. I’m the Coroner for Lifton, the King’s manor. I am very sorry, but I won’t negotiate with a man holding a blade to a Sheriff’s
neck.’

Sir Charles spoke again with an oily sweetness. ‘Sir Richard, I appreciate your candour. So, would you prefer me to slit his throat now?’

‘Aye. Do that and we’ll discuss matters when I have you tied and ready for the rope.’

There was silence for a moment, and then, ‘If you mean to provoke me, you won’t succeed.’

‘No? Good,’ Sir Richard said. He glanced at the others about him. ‘This fellow will not allow the Sheriff to survive. The body would be too much baggage to carry with him. So
he’ll kill Sir James as soon as he may. Nor will he release him willingly. If we negotiate, he will look for advantage . . .’

‘I want you to surrender your arms to me and then you can ride away. I will take the good Sheriff with me as far as the border with Somerset, and then I give you my word I will release
him.’

Sir Richard smiled grimly. ‘In a hog’s arse he will! That whoreson will kill Sheriff James as soon as he may. If we throw down our weapons, he’ll kill us. Even if he let us
ride off, he’d use our weaponry on others. We can’t allow him to escape.’

Baldwin looked from him to Edgar, who nodded agreement. He glanced at Simon.

Simon was troubled, but he gave his assent. ‘We both know Sir Charles, Baldwin. He’s bold, resourceful and determined. I can only think of the bodies by the roadside all the way back
to the Clyst. And he has killed the Bishop and despoiled the Bishop’s manors as far as Petreshayes. No, we cannot allow him to escape.’

‘Very well,’ Baldwin muttered. He raised his voice again. ‘What do you wish us to do, then?’

‘Throw all your weapons here into the roadway. Then you may mount and ride away.’

‘You expect us to throw away all means of defence?’ Baldwin laughed. He looked at Simon and Sir Richard, and they nodded and began to sidle away.

‘You can remain here and haggle if you prefer. I would like to return home, however.’

‘Where is your home now?’ Baldwin asked.

‘I live far from here,’ the response came. ‘I won’t be visiting again for some time. Now, your weapons?’

‘Wait,’ Baldwin said. He turned to the others. ‘Dismount!’ he shouted, but then added: ‘Slowly, and keep your weapons ready!’

Louder again, he said, ‘We are coming!’

‘We’ll hold our fire,’ Sir Charles said.

‘Sir Baldwin, don’t surrender!’

It was the Sheriff. His tone of anguished trepidation was enough to incite in Baldwin’s heart a sudden and unexpected sympathy for the man. ‘Don’t hurt him, Sir Charles. You
know I cannot allow you to escape if you harm him.’

‘Come and throw down your weapons.’

Baldwin glanced about him. His companions were spread out, but he was uneasily certain that the men with Sir Charles would have each of them marked, and they would be ready with their bows,
preparing to fire as soon as the posse came closer.

‘Come, my friends,’ Baldwin said.

 

Venn Ottery

Sir Charles lay with his chin in the dirt, staring through the stems of a blackthorn hedge at the men who slowly approached. This was not how he wanted to finish his ride. It
was a great shame that Sir Baldwin and Simon should have been sent after him, but there was nothing to be done about it now. Two former travelling companions were now his enemies, and that was an
end to it.

‘Stop there,’ he shouted when the men were near the road. ‘Throw your weapons into the roadway. All of them.’

He had over twenty men still. Five were injured and out of the fight, two were scratched and keen to kill those who had hurt them, and three lay in the road. In compensation, there were eight of
the men from Sir Baldwin’s column lying dead, and the Sheriff was here with him, sitting quietly with a knife’s point resting under his chin. He was not moving, but watched the posse
approach with a terrible certainty. He knew that Sir Charles could not allow any of them to escape.

Sir Charles waited until the men were almost at the hedge, and then turned to issue the command to kill them.

At the same time, the Sheriff knocked his hand away and sprang up. ‘Sir Baldwin, beware! It’s a trap – they will kill you too!’

‘Get down!’ Sir Charles roared, and would have opened him from gut to gizzard, but before he could, two arrows were loosed into Sir James de Cockington’s back, and exploded
through his chest and belly. He coughed, and blood dribbled from his chin as he fell to his knees, staring at the two barbed points, before toppling to the ground. Sir Charles clenched his fist,
striking Sir James’s body three times in impotent rage, and then swore viciously and continually as the arrows and quarrels flew over his head, but it was all to no use. The men with Sir
Baldwin were in the road, concealed behind the carts that still littered the place.

There had never been a situation in which Sir Charles had felt at such a loss. Even while abroad he had always known where his escape could be effected. Today, no such avenue occurred to him.
His horses were at the rear of the pasture with Ulric, while down there in the roadway with the carts were his winnings. The treasures he had accumulated from the episcopal manors were packed upon
them. He could escape, perhaps, but only at the cost of losing all he had gained.

He had no choice. Giving an incoherent roar, he leaped down into the road himself, bellowing to his men to follow him. There was a man before him, and he swung his sword, only to have it clash
with Sir Richard’s, then it was knocked away, and he and Sir Richard circled warily. He could hear crashing and shouting, screams of agony, and a terrified man’s last shrill scream,
before he concentrated utterly on Sir Richard. There was a moment of serenity, almost, and then he drew his sword up and into the St George guard, and waited, watching.

Sir Richard launched himself forward, and Sir Charles could have laughed at the clumsy attempt. This fight would be quick, then, with so old and portly an opponent. He turned fluidly and knocked
the sword aside with ease, only to find that it wasn’t there. Sir Richard had reversed his manoeuvre at the last moment, and Sir Charles almost spitted himself on the up-turned point.

It was a caution. A knight as old as Sir Richard must surely have had the expertise to survive many dangerous encounters. Sir Charles warily tested his parrying with his point, without exposing
himself too greatly, and then lunged. His blade was almost at Sir Richard’s belly, when his sword was effortlessly flicked from its path, and Sir Richard’s point came straight for his
throat.

He withdrew again. This opponent was surprisingly competent, he thought, and as he did so, he heard a sound that sent a shaft of ice into his bowels. A horn, and he could feel the ground rumble
beneath his feet. Glancing up the lane, he saw seven more horsemen pounding towards him and his men.

‘’Ware the men!’ he bawled, but his men were not trained warriors. They were competent in a mêlée, or against peasants, when armed with war hammers and axes, but
they had not been trained to stand in line with lances fixed against a foe this deadly. One dropped his weapon, and was instantly slain by his opponent, a second wailed, turned, and fled. He was
cut down by Sir Richard as he passed, and then the horses slammed into the men remaining, their breasts used as rams to batter at the men, while blows were rained down upon them. Men were crushed
against each other, had their skulls broken by axes, were stabbed and hacked at with swords and knives, and in only a few moments, ten were dead, another seven wounded, and being forced back while
the horses herded them into the edge of the roadway.

‘Surrender!’ Sir Richard thundered.

‘Go swyve a sow,’ Sir Charles responded. ‘Your father did.’

Baldwin approached, his sword bloody, a great rent across the front of his tunic. ‘Sir Charles, surrender or we will have to kill you. I would not do that, for memory of the times we
enjoyed in your company.’

‘I will not surrender. What, give up now so I can hang from a tree like a common churl?’

‘The city of Exeter will give you a good hearing. You need not die here.’

‘I will not submit to a pair of rural knights with the dregs of Exeter to back them.’

‘Then guard yourself,’ Baldwin said.

Sir Richard interrupted him as he raised his sword. ‘Sir Baldwin, he is mine. I would not have you kill a friend. Leave him to me.’

‘Sir Richard, you have a most dangerous opponent.’

‘Sir Baldwin, I watched this man’s fellows rape a poor woman yesterday. My wife was killed by a faithless, dishonoured coward and as I killed him, so shall I kill this. Without
aid.’

Baldwin hesitated, but the cold rage in Sir Richard’s eye was impossible to ignore. ‘Very well,’ he conceded, and withdrew.

De Coyntes’ House

It was already beginning to edge towards twilight when Bydaud de Coyntes made his way along the street towards the alley and his home.

He had a strange feeling as he approached them. A kind of reluctance he had never known before. It was almost as though he was fearful that there might be another body outside the house when he
reached it. Nonsense, of course, but even so, he could hardly help himself from looking about him, his eyes going straight to the piles of rubbish that lay against the wall of the houses in the
street, hoping not to see any limbs or a face staring back at him.

He was tired today. Perhaps it was the effect of two broken nights’ sleep in the last few days, but he thought it was more than just that. There was a new nervousness about him at work.
The excitement of new opportunities.

It was yesterday that the first of the merchants had come to him, a shifty-looking man in his late fifties with a shock of unruly white hair beneath his cap, and narrow, keen eyes that moved
about the tiny shop like a bird’s looking for a morsel on which to pounce.

‘We have been reconsidering some of the city investments and other works,’ the man had said without preamble.

‘Yes, sir?’ Bydaud had replied.

This was no ordinary merchant entering to have a word; it was a senior man from the city, one of the four stewards, and with his patronage a poor merchant like Bydaud could hope to make a much
better living.

‘We do not like what we have heard about Henry Paffard. There is no place in the city for a man who has confessed to murdering women, and no place for him to share in decisions about the
future direction of the city. If you were to be asked, it may be possible that you could join the Freedom of the City in his place.’

‘I would be honoured.’

‘I hope so. Not many cities would consider bringing in foreigners, but we are a more progressive city, I like to think.’

He had continued to outline some projects already underway, and Bydaud was keen to help with each. He had the contacts with France and the Low Countries which the city needed, and in a short
time all was agreed. The steward left him and said he would be back as soon as he had discussed the matter with his companions in the council.

As good as his word, he had arrived this very afternoon, and in a short while, Bydaud and he had agreed their contract. Bydaud knew he would make a little less money on these voyages than he
would usually, but he was also convinced that the prestige would be worth it.

‘What of Henry?’ he asked at one point.

The steward looked at him appraisingly. ‘You prefer us to take this business back to him?’

‘No!’

‘Good. Then that is all.’

For the first time, Bydaud thought his decision to come here to Exeter was about to pay off. The money which this deal would bring in would help, but it was the idea of additional business that
attracted his attention. There was potential to make much more in the longer term. Especially just now. The city was going through a period of expansion, with the new cathedral building and
renovations to the city walls, and these men were offering him a percentage of all that effort. With luck, in a year or two he would be a member of the Freedom himself, every bit as important as
Paffard ever had been.

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